From a hostel to a luxury hotel, bus to plane, from Barcelona to Miami, from electro to techno rave festivals... our catalogue is enough to satisfy the desires of a wide audience.

Destination Clubbing regularly extends its offer by adding new destinations depending on the season.

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Behind the commercial offer there really is the idea of partying everywhere, particularly from everyone who leads the team at Destination Clubbing! Thanks to their experience, tour operators and players in the world of music and events who make up the team are able to advise the most discerning travelers and offer them the best destinations at the best prices.

'We have tested all the destinations that we offer on the site, the first customer to satisfy is us!'

Encouraged by its success Destination Clubbing launched a new version of its website late in 2013 which now addresses an international audience thanks to its multilingual and multi-currency interface.

Hamburger Bahnhof

One of the most popular art galleries in Berlin is housed in a
former train station. The historic Hamburger Bahnhof, built in 1846
at the Tiergarten, was badly damaged during World War II, but has
been restored and reopened with some modern elements added to the
architecture as an exhibition venue for an extensive contemporary
art collection. The former station now offers 107,639 square feet
(10,000 sq metres) of space filled with works by the likes of Andy
Warhol, Josephy Beuys and Roy Lichtenstein. The basis of the
exhibition is the Marx private collection, but there are changing
exhibitions and good examples of the Italian Transavanguardia and
minimalist art on show too.

Information & Facts

Address

Invalidenstraße 50- 51

Admission

EUR12; children under 16 free. Concessions
available.

Language

German is the official language. English is also widely
spoken and understood.

Money

The unit of currency is the Euro (EUR), divided into 100 cents.
ATMs and exchange bureaux are widely available. The major credit
cards are becoming more widely accepted in many large shops, hotels
and restaurants, although Germans themselves prefer to carry cash.
Travellers cheques are best cashed at exchange bureaux, as banks
often won't change them. The quickest and most convenient way to
change money is to obtain cash from one of the ATM machines that
are ubiquitous features on all German streets. Banks are closed on
weekends, but exchange bureaux at airports and main railway
stations are open daily from 6am to 10pm.

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